There's a good bit of discussion of this film as "horror"; may I suggest
that it's horrific in the sense of the ancient Greek tragedies. There's no
attempt to coerce your Hollywood-abused adrenals into delivering just one
more squirt by means of some in-your-face special effect. In fact, for each
of these slowly developed stories, once you've understood the premise, the
story will unfold pretty much as you've guessed it must, inexorably,
relentlessly. The ghosts aren't there to "spook" us, they're to show us our
common human spiritual and emotional failings. The horror of a ghost wife,
for instance, isn't that her chains drag noisily across the the hardwood
parquet floor, but that we've created her by our insensitivity, our
misplaced values, or our betrayals.

The visual style is stupendous! The action takes place in a disappeared,
iconic world of classical medieval Japan, perfect, and admitting no trace
of
the reality of modern times. Overlaid is a European Expressionist color
sensibility, with emotionally charged color displacements of sky and skin,
as if Hokusai and Ernst Ludwig Kirchner had been working cooperatively on
the sets and lighting.

This is a wonderful movie. Please ignore attempts to fit it into some box,
some genre. Rather look at it as a mature work of art, which happens to
choose old Japanese ghost stories as its starting point.

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